Tag Archives: Khadija Raza

My White Best Friend

My White Best Friend
★★★★★

The Bunker

My White Best Friend

My White Best Friend (and Other Letters Left Unsaid)

The Bunker

Reviewed – 20th March 2019

★★★★★

 

“Using the word show seems a bit weird. It wasn’t really a show. It was an event, a sharing.”

 

Yesterday evening at The Bunker felt unlike any evening I’ve ever spent in a theatre, and as such, I felt it was right to write about it in a totally different way. I’ve introduced an I for starters, and so I’m going to introduce myself too. I’m a cis, pansexual, middle class white woman, aged 48. It feels essential to let you know this, as the series of evenings which Rachel De-Lahay and Millie Bhatia have curated put identity centre stage – racial identity, class identity, sexual identity and gender identity – and one of the things that last night made very clear, is that we can only view things through our own identity prism. So the old myth of the invisible critic just won’t wash.

The Bunker felt like a club last night. Buzzy. There was an excellent DJ, we were all standing, and we were offered a drink (rum and Ting, delicious) when we walked into the space. It was a young crowd and it looked and felt and sounded like London; like the London that is outside, that we journeyed through to get there. Which felt great. And made me realise how rare that is. There were knots of friends chatting, predominantly people of colour, and a sense of relaxed ownership, a comfortable knowledge – this night is for us, and about us – which I could only share from the edges. And that feeling taught me something, even before the show began. Even using the word show seems a bit weird. It wasn’t really a show. It was an event, a sharing.

Rachel De-Lahay’s idea is a simple one: different writers leave a letter to be read out loud by a specific performer. The letter is in a sealed envelope and the performer reads it live, having never read it before. The evening kicks off with a long letter that Rachel wrote to one of her best friends, Inès de Clercq, and it is Inès who reads it. The letter is honest, and funny and uncomfortable for Inès to read, as it is a reminder that no matter how much Rachel loves her, her race can’t help but play a part in their relationship. It is uncomfortable for any white person to hear, to witness, to think about, and that’s the point. The young woman standing in front of me was completely overwhelmed by tears half way through this reading, and, throughout the night, the electricity of words being spoken that are so often, too often, left unsaid, was palpable. There was a charge; the air crackled with it. Of urgency, of energy, of presence.

The next letter was written as a piece of spoken word poetry. Fantastic writing by Jammz; it also dealt with race in friendship, and Ben Bailey Smith (‘I’m mixed race, so I’m my own white best friend’) was direct and charming, and did the words justice. The final, and longest letter of the evening was written by Zia Ahmed and read by Zainab Hasan. This took a different form again, with Zainab reading out a selection of quotes – from Zia himself, from the Home Secretary Sajid Javid, from popular Muslim comedians – before reading Zia’s unbearably painful story of continual racist profiling which led him finally to stop his job as a nanny.

It went against the grain to give this show a star rating, as the words and stories of these artists and performers don’t need my critical validation, but they do need to be listened to. So consider my five stars a way of saying that this is essential theatre. Get yourself a ticket and open your ears.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography courtesy The Bunker

 


My White Best Friend (and Other Letters Left Unsaid)

The Bunker until 23rd March

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Section 2 | ★★★★ | June 2018
Breathe | ★★★★ | August 2018
Eris | ★★★★ | September 2018
Reboot: Shorts 2 | ★★★★ | October 2018
Semites | ★★★ | October 2018
Chutney | ★★★ | November 2018
The Interpretation of Dreams | ★★★ | November 2018
Sam, The Good Person | ★★★ | January 2019
Welcome To The UK | ★★ | January 2019
Boots | ★★★★ | February 2019

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com

 

No One is Coming to Save You – 4 Stars

Coming

No One is Coming to Save You

The Bunker

Reviewed – 15th June 2018

★★★★

“In excellent debut performances, Agatha Elwes and Rudolphe Mdlongwa portray two different personalities journeying through recent and childhood memories”

 

Produced by ‘This Noise’, a new, young theatre company, ‘No One Is Coming to Save You’ is one of six projects chosen as part of The Bunker’s ‘Breaking Out’ festival of world premiere shows. An original and provocative ‘duologue’ written by Nathan Ellis takes us into the minds of a young woman and a young father, both unable to sleep one night. In excellent debut performances, Agatha Elwes and Rudolphe Mdlongwa portray two different personalities journeying through recent and childhood memories, trying to make sense of life. The young woman overcomes boredom and loneliness by allowing her imagination to carry her away in vivid visions. The young man pulls himself towards his role as a father by searching for his own past feelings. Fluid in narrative and movement, their separate stories wind around each other on stage, illustrating the angst of young people with the prospect of their whole lives ahead of them in a world which appears to be steadily declining, something relevant to every new generation as they question their existence, purpose, responsibility and happiness.

The pictorial, uncluttered set design by Khadija Raza and Alice Simonato concentrates the action primarily in a small, central area, focusing our attention on the words, but allowing for some more expansive movement. The half full glasses of water and muted television, from the characters’ first description, are the only decorative features. Jessica Hung Han Yun’s lighting flows beautifully from evening to night to morning, though occasionally leaving the actors in darkness when they move away from centre stage. The sound design by Callum Wyles is of superb quality and clarity. A few odd moments of integrated movement (Lanre Malaolu) could work better with more consistency throughout, but the production is generally figurative enough without.

More than a sense of waiting, as described in the play’s publicity, director, Charlotte Fraser, creates an atmosphere of reflection and exploration. And more than two individuals living in social, political and economic fear (both have jobs and homes), Nathan Ellis’ writing comes across as an expression of personal conflict. ‘No One Is Coming to Save You’ is an entrancing show – confident, sensitive acting and direction, and creative set, lighting and sound. However, varied information about the intentions of the project are confusing; it conveys a mindscape rather than sends a message, but is engaging and stimulating for the audience.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

 

 


No One is Coming to Save You

The Bunker until 7th July

 

Related
Previously reviewed at this venue
Electra | ★★★★ | March 2018
Devil With the Blue Dress | ★★ | April 2018
Conquest | ★★★★ | May 2018

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com